Journal of Agricultural Sciences (Belgrade) (Jan 2014)

Effect of land use change on the structure of Gleyic Fluvisols in western Serbia

  • Gajić Boško A.,
  • Kresović Branka J.,
  • Dragović Snežana D.,
  • Sredojević Zorica J.,
  • Dragović Ranko M.

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2298/JAS1402151G
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 59, no. 2
pp. 151 – 160

Abstract

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Changes in land use can significantly affect aggregate distribution and water stability of structural aggregates. This study was conducted in the Kolubara River Valley, Western Serbia, to determine the effects of land use changes on composition and water stability of aggregates in humus horizons (0-30 cm) of noncarbonated Gleyic Fluvisols. This study was conducted at nine sites, where each site contained two adjacent land uses of natural grassland and arable land which underwent crop rotation for >100 years. Soil samples were taken from depths of 0-10, 10-20 and 20-30 cm for each land use. When the grassland was converted into arable land, the content of the agronomically most valuable aggregates (0.25-10 mm) of cultivated soils for a depth of 0-30 cm was significantly reduced by 22-40%, while the percentage of cloddy aggregates (>10 mm) increased by 41-68%, compared to grassland. In addition, the long-term arable soil had significantly (p 3 mm. Their content is ≈ 2.3 times lower in arable soil (12.6%) than in grassland (28.6%) at a depth of 0-10 cm. In addition, meanweight diameters of dry and wetstable aggregates and structure coefficient showed significant differences between land use at a depth of 0-30 cm. The results showed that the conversion of natural grassland to arable land in the lowland ecosystems of Western Serbia degraded aggregate distribution and stability. [Projekat Ministarstva nauke Republike Srbije, br. III43009]

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